Thursday, October 4, 2012

Art Of East Jesus


                                              Art of East Jesus


East Jesus, Bottle Wall, Slab City, California, Art Garden, outsider art, Sculpture, Colorado Desert, Charles Russell, bottle wall, installation
Bottle Wall and entrance to Sculpture Garden

    There between the toxic waters of the Salton Sea and the active bombing range in the most

 remote area of Slab City sits East Jesus, a permanent artist community in the Colorado Desert

 that features sculptures and installations. The late Charles Russell, radical thinker and art car

 decorator, founded East Jesus in 2007 to create an inimitable establishment that would be both

 a livable space and an art installation decorated from the inside out.  



Financial difficulties prevented Russell from purchasing the land needed to create such a 

venue, so he took his project to Slab City, “The Last Free Place in America,” where he could 

build without permits, create without boundaries, and live on the land freely (and for free). But 

freedom comes at a price, as East Jesus is characterized by taxing summer weather, and lack of 

electricity, gas, water, and a sewer system. 


Despite those challenges, Russell and a small band of allies, created a comfortable living 

environment, inventing a shower and toilet, and generating electricity through solar panels. With

 a hint of sarcasm, Russell named his creation East Jesus, meaning a faraway, remote, and 

uninteresting place not worth visiting. Of all the labels one might stick on East Jesus

“uninteresting” does not come to mind.


After Russell’s sudden death last summer, his friends and supporters took over East Jesus

and his work. Frank Redford, curator, calls himself an East Jesus “Bully,”  along with 

other dedicated artists, musicians, writers, and freethinkers, continue to create and expand 

within its walls.  


Today the installation at East Jesus consists of a main structure, the Art Garden, livable art

 cars and buses, a music room complete with a baby grand piano, a garden, a kitchen, and more.

 EJ artists mostly use trash, and found/recycled material to assemble sculptures, installations, 

and habitable spaces. They nurture the idea of making something beautiful and useful from 

ugly, unwanted and discarded items, so East Jesus exists in harmonious balance between a 

rejected land and installations made of rejected objects.


Over the years, East Jesus has become a unique place for artists to express themselves in 

unconventional, even radical ways.  It is a place to live and work away from traditional galleries, 

museums, and the institutionalized contemporary art world. Art here does not require a critic’s 

approval, nor is it made with the intention to be sold, traded, and reviewed. Here art exists to be 

touched, rearranged, and lived in. Most EJ artists don’t have a traditional art education, nor is 

one required to live and create here. Some participants don’t even consider themselves artists in 

their daily lives, though they still produce art within the East Jesus borders.


This small community exemplifies the relational aesthetic, where people come together to 

participate in the shared activity of making art. The environment was created through art, and 

art is the daily activity that gives the community’s participants a sense of worth and belonging. 

Here, art shapes human relationships and provides an alternative social framework. 


Some of the Art Garden’s sculptures and installations, like “Tower Barbarella” and a 

“Bottle Wall” are collaborations. Others were created by individual artists, like Frank Redford’s

 “The Man’s Vices,” and Joes Holiday‘s “Mammoth.” Other works, such as the installation “TV

 Wall,” are meant to remain uncompleted works. Redford said that as long as there are more 

found TVs and computer monitors, the structure will continue to grow.  


Post Apacolypse and Survival are the underling themes of East Jesus installations and the 

life style. The harsh environment and off-the-grid exile living, combined with sculptures and 

installations created from trash found, for the most part, in its own environment, offer viewers 

an unfamiliar, uncanny experience. It is a literal glimpse into an unfortunate future of what life 

would become following the very real threat of nuclear war or environmental disaster. This 

perspective forces the viewer into active engagement with an installation while experiencing a 

sense of community and alternative social interaction. 


The essence of survival is not only limited to East Jesus’ human occupants. The art itself, in

 the severe open desert heat, under the blistering sun, weathering thunderstorms and floods, 

must outlast this unrelenting environment. Survival and the post-apocalyptic future are both 

communicated in a multiplicity of themes, religious, political, and literal. Perhaps it is an 

expression of the uncertainty for East Jesus itself, both as a collective and individual effort. After

 all, the land upon which East Jesus stands does not legally belong to its inhabitants, so there is a

 sensible fear that federal officials might one day arrive on bulldozers and raze the art and 

habitat. Perhaps it is an encouraging message of rebuilding, hope, and new beginning.


Found and communal art may not be new ideas in the contemporary art world, but what 

makes East Jesus unique is its treatment of a new genre, the roots of which can be found in the 

temporary establishment of Black Rock City, at the annual Burning Man Festival. Furthermore,

  East Jesus revamps old ideas in a new and unpredictable way. It offers an innovative 

conceptual representation of unity and harmony between the object, environment, artist, and 

lifestyle.


Perceptual distance/distinction between artist, object, and viewer remains intangible, as it is 

merging and interchangeable, ultimately providing a unified, continuous experience for everyone

 involved. This kind of conceptual representation is difficult, perhaps impossible to realize in a

 traditional museum or gallery setting, but these are the very qualities that push East Jesus in 

fresh, unique, and imaginative directions.






The Ducks installation in Art Garden



Inside the Cinnabar Charm.  Art Car by Charles Russell.


Art Car in Art Garden


Tv, Wall, east jesus, slab city, art garden, sculpture, installation, art, outsider art, communal art, political art, colorado desert, california, salton sea, inland
 TV Wall




A livable space inside a trailer


Man's Vices by Frank Redford


Another sculpture in the Art Garden


Mammoth by Joe Holliday




Buried House.  Installation by Ben Wolf and Heidi Tullmann 


The office


Celling decorated with vintage records


The area outside to sit , talk and relax


Another livable space inside the trailer decorated with T-shirts




Frank Redford, a curator of East Jesus, gives a tour to a visitor from Los Angels Lance Dutcher.   The installation Frank is pointing is "The Can Organ".  This installation is  known to make intriguing sound during the rain.


Bottles for the Bottle Wall.  


Frank Redford, a curator and a Bully of East Jesus.


The kitchen.  a clever way to get a gas stove work by connecting it to a propane tank.


Music room


A memorial installation dedicated to Charles Russell


Installation in progress



Installation in progress


A Photo a Day





Stand Up Paddleboarding is a phenomenon that gained its popularity on the West Coast.  It was originated in the shores of Hawaii and about 10 years ago only a few people knew of it. SUP became popular after a surfing star, Laird Hamilton started catching huge waves on his oversized surf board standing up. SUP is similar to surfing, however the ocean and waves are not required.



Two Women paddle on stand up paddleboard, Long Beach, CA 

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

A Photo a Day



A Room in the abandoned building, Bombay Beach, CA

This picture reminds me of  Robert Polidori's book "Zones of Exclusion: Pripyat and Chernoble".



Sunday, September 30, 2012